It’s not clear if either fight will factor into the evening’s televised card.

Recent WEC featherweight title challenger Gamburyan finds himself in need of a win after suffering back-to-back losses. “The Ultimate Fighter 5″ veteran fell via second-round TKO to then-WEC champ Jose Aldo this past September before returning to the UFC’s octagon for the first time in more than two years and dropping a majority decision to Tyson Griffin at “UFC on Versus 4: Kongo vs. Barry.”

Nunes also hopes to return to winning ways after dropping a unanimous decision to Kenny Florian at UFC 131. The loss snapped a three-fight win streak for Nunes, who wrapped his WEC stint with victories over Tyler Toner and Raphael Assuncao before downing Mike Brown at UFC 125.

Escovedo likely finds himself in a must-win situation after dropping his UFC debut to Renan Barao in a one-sided unanimous-decision result. The veteran Escovedo, perhaps best-known for overcoming a life-threatening case of staph to return to action, is just 103 in his past four overall outings.

He’ll face Mizugaki, who has alternated losses and wins during his seven contest under the Zuffa, LLC banner. Mizugaki made his WEC debut in April 2009 in a bantamweight title loss to Miguel Torres. He’s since wrapped wins over Reuben Duran, Rani Yahya and Jeff Curran around losses to top bantamweights Brian Bowles, Urijah Faber and Scott Jorgensen. The Bowles and Duran results came in UFC action.

UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey is probably the greatest female fighter on the planet, which is a tremendous feat. So why are we seemingly so obsessed with arguing about whether she could beat up men?